The tragic events at an abandoned gold mine in Stilfontein last year exposed serious flaws in South Africa's policing operations. Over 90 illegal miners died during a rescue effort, amid a campaign that blocked supplies and entrances. An inquiry revealed failures to gather and act on critical information about those trapped underground.
In mid-January 2025, rescue teams at shaft 11 of the Buffelsfontein Gold Mine complex in Stilfontein, southwest of Johannesburg, recovered 93 bodies from deep tunnels. The site, an abandoned gold mine, became a scene of horror as forensic workers in protective gear loaded wrapped corpses onto trucks, while survivors were assisted under heavy police guard.
This disaster stemmed from Operation Vala Umgodi, a national police initiative launched in August 2024 to combat illegal mining. Named 'close the hole' in isiZulu, the operation involved sealing key shafts and halting food and water supplies to force miners—known as zama zamas—to surface and face arrest. The strategy aimed to end underground activities without immediate court processes, but it led to dire conditions for those inside.
The South African Human Rights Commission (SAHRC) inquiry highlighted systemic issues. Shaft 11 plunged 2km deep across 19 levels, requiring elevators for safe exit, which were unavailable. Community efforts in November 2024 included a manual pulley system that saved some, but it was insufficient for hundreds trapped. Camera footage and two-way note communication with miners only began then, months into the operation.
Further, the operation ignored emerging details of vulnerable individuals underground. Testimony before the SAHRC in October 2025 revealed that most who resurfaced were human trafficking victims, including 27 children. Despite this, police maintained the 'illegal mining' focus. A December 2024 statement from the National Joint Operational and Intelligence Structure insisted miners were refusing to emerge to evade arrest, refusing to adapt tactics.
The South African Police Service (SAPS) defended continuing the approach, noting advanced decomposition of bodies prevented determining exact causes of death. President Cyril Ramaphosa has not initiated a judicial commission. Vanya Gastrow, a senior researcher at the Institute for Security Studies, argues this reflects a prioritization of assumptions over reliable data, endangering lives and questioning human rights commitments.